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The duo only produced two singles under the Toxic Two name, namely "Rave Generator" and "Chemical Reaction". "Rave Generator" - in essence, a bootleg remix of Frank de Wulf's track "Pure Pleasure" [3] - entered the UK singles chart in March 1992, and rose to its peak at no. 13 in its third week on the charts. [4] The duo performed the song on ...
Example of a two-minute song generated by Suno AI; its lyrics were generated by ChatGPT. The Style of Music prompt was "Calm, psychedelic rock". The program operates by producing songs based on text prompts provided by users. Suno does not disclose the dataset used to train its artificial intelligence but claims it has been safeguarded against ...
Candy Flip's track was initially a club hit on the rave scene before crossing over into the pop chart. [3] The track is now considered a "rave classic", [by whom?] and was reissued on vinyl in 2005 on S12 Records. The UK DJ remix service Disco Mix Club remixed the Candy Flip version, removing the beat and adding an interpolation of "Hey Jude ...
The Emo Nite event, now a full-fledged national business in its 10th year, started out as a way for creators Petracca and Freed to listen to the kind of music they enjoyed — despite it not being ...
S3RL is an Australian hardcore musician from Brisbane who performs as "S3RL" (or "DJ S3RL"). [2] The stage name "S3RL" was based on a nickname his cousins gave him when he was little, which derived from his cousins calling him "arsehole". To avoid profanity, they began saying "arserl", and according to S3RL, the word stuck and became his stage ...
1994 saw the release of "Breaking Free" and "Hear Me" on Slipmatt and Lime's own Awesome Records imprint, the former being embraced by jungle and rave DJs alike. The tracks were later remixed by DJ SS (Formation Records) and DJ Seduction (Impact Records) respectively. By 1995, Slipmatt's DJ sets had veered strongly towards the tougher hardcore ...
According to East German DJ Paul van Dyk the techno-based rave scene was a major force in re-establishing social connections between East and West Germany during the unification period. [87] Soon the first techno clubs emerged in East Berlin such as the Tresor (est. 1991), the Planet (1991–1993), and the Bunker (1992–1996). [88]
An algorave (from an algorithm and rave) is an event where people dance to music generated from algorithms, often using live coding techniques. [1] Alex McLean of Slub and Nick Collins coined the word "algorave" in 2011, and the first event under such a name was organised in London, England. [2]